scholarly journals P.128 The clinical utility of the spinal instability neoplastic score (SINS) and its role in surgical management of patients with spinal metastatic disease

Author(s):  
A Dakson ◽  
E Leck ◽  
M Butler ◽  
G Thibault-Halman ◽  
S Christie

Background: The Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS) is used to assess mechanical instability based on radiographic and clinical factors. We conducted this study to evaluate the clinical utility of SINS in surgical decision-making in spinal metastasis and its association with metastatic epidural spinal cord compression (MESCC). Methods: We allocated 285 patients with spinal metastatic disease through a retrospective review. SINS was calculated using good-quality computed tomography. The degree of MESCC was assessed using 0 to 3 grading system. Results: Based on SINS, patients were categorized into stable (35.1%), potentially unstable (52.3%) and unstable (12.6%) groups. In the surgical intervention group, there was 69.5% treated with decompression and instrumented fusion, 17% with decompression alone, 8.5% with percutaneous vertebral augmentation and 5% with instrumented vertebral augmentation. A significantly higher proportion of patients with stable SINS (63.6%) were treated surgically without instrumentation (X2=10.6, P=0.005), whereas instrumentation was utilized in 87.5% of patients with unstable SINS. Grade 3 MESCC occurred in 65.5% of patients with unstable SINS, whereas 71.4% of patients with stable SINS had grade 0 MESCC (X2=42.1, P<0.001). Conclusions: SINS is associated with higher degrees of MESCC and plays an important role in surgical decision-making, facilitating assessment and recognition of spinal instability in need of urgent appropriate surgical interventions.

Author(s):  
E Leck ◽  
A Dakson ◽  
M Butler ◽  
G Thibault-Halman ◽  
S Christie

Background: The evaluation of patients presenting with spinal metastatic disease is often challenging. The Tokuhashi scale intends to facilitate this process. We conducted this study to investigate its clinical utility in surgical-decision making in patients with spinal metastasis. Methods: The oncology database was used to allocate 285 patients with spinal metastasis between 2010 and 2015. The Tokuhashi scale components were determined from a chart review. Results: Based on the Tokuhashi scale, there was 69.1% in the non-operative/radiation group (group 1), 23.2% in the palliative/excisional surgical group (group2) and 7.7% in the surgical group (group 3). Using Kaplan-Meiers estimate, survival time was significantly different across the three groups with means 232.8±30.8, 352.3±49.2 and 568.3±206.1 days, respectively. A significantly higher proportion of patients (84.6%) were treated non-surgically in group 1, compared to 45.5% in group 3 (X2=19.5, P<0.001). However, there was no correlation between the type of surgical interventions (i.e. instrumented decompression, decompression alone, percutaneous vertebral augmentation and instrumented vertebral augmentation) and the Tokuhashi score. Conclusions: This review illustrates the utility of the Tokuhashi scale in predicting survival. However, it does not address the new role of emerging different surgical strategies for the treatment of spinal metastasis and lacks information concerning spinal instability.


2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 259-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenji Masuda ◽  
Takayuki Higashi ◽  
Katsutaka Yamada ◽  
Tatsuhiro Sekiya ◽  
Tomoyuki Saito

OBJECTIVEThe aim of this study was to assess the usefulness of radiological parameters for surgical decision-making in patients with degenerative lumbar scoliosis (DLS) by comparing the clinical and radiological results after decompression or decompression and fusion surgery.METHODSThe authors prospectively planned surgical treatment for 298 patients with degenerative lumbar disease between September 2005 and March 2013. The surgical method used at their institution to address intervertebral instability is precisely defined based on radiological parameters. Among 64 patients with a Cobb angle ranging from 10° to 25°, 57 patients who underwent follow-up for more than 2 years postoperatively were evaluated. These patients were divided into 2 groups: those in the decompression group underwent decompression alone (n = 25), and those in the fusion group underwent decompression and short segmental fusion (n = 32). Surgical outcomes were reviewed, including preoperative and postoperative Cobb angles, lumbar lordosis based on radiological parameters, and Japanese Orthopaedic Association (JOA) scores.RESULTSThe JOA scores of the decompression group and fusion group improved from 5.9 ± 1.6 to 10.0 ± 2.8 and from 7.2 ± 2.0 to 11.3 ± 2.8, respectively, which was not significantly different between the groups. At the final follow-up, the postoperative Cobb angle in the decompression group changed from 14° ± 2.9° to 14.3° ± 6.4° and remained stable, while the Cobb angle in the fusion group decreased from 14.8° ± 4.0° to 10.0° ± 8.5° after surgery.CONCLUSIONSThe patients in both groups demonstrated improved JOA scores and preserved Cobb angles after surgery. The improvement in JOA scores and preservation of Cobb angles in both groups show that the evaluation of spinal instability using radiological parameters is appropriate for surgical decision-making.


Author(s):  
A Dakson ◽  
E Leck ◽  
M Butler ◽  
G Thibault-Halman ◽  
S Christie

Background: This study aims to provide epidemiological data concerning spinal instability and patterns of metastatic invasion of the spine based on tumor histology. Methods: We allocated 285 patients with spinal metastatic disease through a retrospective review. SINS was calculated using good-quality computed tomography (CT) imaging studies. Spinal metastases were also grouped into intracompartmental, extracompartmental or multiple metastases. Results: Esophageal cancer was the least likely to be associated with instability with about 64% of cases being stable. The highest rate of instability scores was observed in breast carcinoma with 18% of cases graded as unstable. Renal cell carcinoma was associated with lytic spinal metastases whereas blastic metastases mostly occurred in prostate carcinoma (P<0.001). Whereas 68.1% of cases represented multiple metastases, the remainder was associated with either intracompartmental (13.3%) or extracompartmental (18.6%) disease. The highest degrees of spinal instability (intermediate and unstable categories) were associated with extra-compartmental metastatic disease (P<0.001). Conclusions: This study sheds light on the patterns of spinal metastatic disease and mechanical instability on the basis of tumor histology, utilizing standardized scoring systems. The utilization of such scoring systems allows for a standardized approach towards description and analysis of spinal metastasis facilitating clinical research in this avenue.


2019 ◽  
Vol 114 (1) ◽  
pp. S68-S69
Author(s):  
Somashekar Krishna ◽  
Phil Hart ◽  
Anjuli K. Luthra ◽  
Kyle Porter ◽  
George Papachristou ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 177 (4S) ◽  
pp. 405-405
Author(s):  
Suman Chatterjee ◽  
Jonathon Ng ◽  
Edward D. Matsumoto

2008 ◽  
Vol 56 (S 1) ◽  
Author(s):  
B Osswald ◽  
U Tochtermann ◽  
S Keller ◽  
D Badowski-Zyla ◽  
V Gegouskov ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (s1) ◽  
pp. 60-61
Author(s):  
Kadie Clancy ◽  
Esmaeel Dadashzadeh ◽  
Christof Kaltenmeier ◽  
JB Moses ◽  
Shandong Wu

OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: This retrospective study aims to create and train machine learning models using a radiomic-based feature extraction method for two classification tasks: benign vs. pathologic PI and operation of benefit vs. operation not needed. The long-term goal of our study is to build a computerized model that incorporates both radiomic features and critical non-imaging clinical factors to improve current surgical decision-making when managing PI patients. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Searched radiology reports from 2010-2012 via the UPMC MARS Database for reports containing the term “pneumatosis” (subsequently accounting for negations and age restrictions). Our inclusion criteria included: patient age 18 or older, clinical data available at time of CT diagnosis, and PI visualized on manual review of imaging. Cases with intra-abdominal free air were excluded. Collected CT imaging data and an additional 149 clinical data elements per patient for a total of 75 PI cases. Data collection of an additional 225 patients is ongoing. We trained models for two clinically-relevant prediction tasks. The first (referred to as prediction task 1) classifies between benign and pathologic PI. Benign PI is defined as either lack of intraoperative visualization of transmural intestinal necrosis or successful non-operative management until discharge. Pathologic PI is defined as either intraoperative visualization of transmural PI or withdrawal of care and subsequent death during hospitalization. The distribution of data samples for prediction task 1 is 47 benign cases and 38 pathologic cases. The second (referred to as prediction task 2) classifies between whether the patient benefitted from an operation or not. “Operation of benefit” is defined as patients with PI, be it transmural or simply mucosal, who benefited from an operation. “Operation not needed” is defined as patients who were safely discharged without an operation or patients who had an operation, but nothing was found. The distribution of data samples for prediction task 2 is 37 operation not needed cases and 38 operation of benefit cases. An experienced surgical resident from UPMC manually segmented 3D PI ROIs from the CT scans (5 mm Axial cut) for each case. The most concerning ~10-15 cm segment of bowel for necrosis with a 1 cm margin was selected. A total of 7 slices per patient were segmented for consistency. For both prediction task 1 and prediction task 2, we independently completed the following procedure for testing and training: 1.) Extracted radiomic features from the 3D PI ROIs that resulted in 99 total features. 2.) Used LASSO feature selection to determine the subset of the original 99 features that are most significant for performance of the prediction task. 3.) Used leave-one-out cross-validation for testing and training to account for the small dataset size in our preliminary analysis. Implemented and trained several machine learning models (AdaBoost, SVM, and Naive Bayes). 4.) Evaluated the trained models in terms of AUC and Accuracy and determined the ideal model structure based on these performance metrics. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Prediction Task 1: The top-performing model for this task was an SVM model trained using 19 features. This model had an AUC of 0.79 and an accuracy of 75%. Prediction Task 2: The top-performing model for this task was an SVM model trained using 28 features. This model had an AUC of 0.74 and an accuracy of 64%. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to use radiomic-based machine learning models for the prediction of tissue ischemia, specifically intestinal ischemia in the setting of PI. In this preliminary study, which serves as a proof of concept, the performance of our models has demonstrated the potential of machine learning based only on radiomic imaging features to have discriminative power for surgical decision-making problems. While many non-imaging-related clinical factors play a role in the gestalt of clinical decision making when PI presents, we have presented radiomic-based models that may augment this decision-making process, especially for more difficult cases when clinical features indicating acute abdomen are absent. It should be noted that prediction task 2, whether or not a patient presenting with PI would benefit from an operation, has lower performance than prediction task 1 and is also a more challenging task for physicians in real clinical environments. While our results are promising and demonstrate potential, we are currently working to increase our dataset to 300 patients to further train and assess our models. References DuBose, Joseph J., et al. “Pneumatosis Intestinalis Predictive Evaluation Study (PIPES): a multicenter epidemiologic study of the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma.” Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery 75.1 (2013): 15-23. Knechtle, Stuart J., Andrew M. Davidoff, and Reed P. Rice. “Pneumatosis intestinalis. Surgical management and clinical outcome.” Annals of Surgery 212.2 (1990): 160.


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